Faith

Discussion in 'Bible Chat' started by ProDeo, Jun 6, 2017.

  1. RabbiKnife

    RabbiKnife Open the pod bay door, please HAL. Staff Member

    Yeah, that got you into hot water...
     
  2. Dani

    Dani You're probably fine.

    In all fairness, that's exactly how I feel when I have to read post after post after page discussing the finer things of "into Christ" versus "in Christ", or what the President did on a day ending in Y or whatever. We all have our limits. :cool:
     
  3. BrianW

    BrianW Active Member

    I can gladly listen to an hour or two of venting from someone willing to put up with me. That's different. Besides, I hate sleeping alone and the couch just ain't the place to do it anyway.

    As far as forums go, now that I'm free I can ignore any threads and posts I wish to.

    Ahhh. I love the smell of freedom in the morning!
     
  4. devilslayer365

    devilslayer365 Wazzup?!

    These "sons of God" couldn't be mere humans. Why would mutant giants be the result of human men and human women having sexual relations? If supernatural beings mingled with humans, however, it makes more sense that the offspring would be unusual. And they were. They were violent and wicked giants. The Holy Spirit impregnating Mary with Jesus shows that it's not just physical beings that can procreate with humans. Maybe the angels had fallen so far in their thoughts that they allowed their curiosity of what it would be like to be with humans to take over their actions and they indulged in having sex. I don't think they were able to become actual complete HUMANS, but I think they could manipulate matter enough that they could form a body that functioned enough and looked enough like humans. Angels have been recorded eating in scripture. That requires some kind of physical body to do. An angel wrestled with Jacob. That required a physical body of some kind. This is proof that angels can form a physical body of some kind. I believe the fallen angels cannot do this any longer, though, and are now demons seeking to possess people when they can. Why can't they continue to make bodies for themselves? Perhaps they are under threat from God to suffer some horrible punishment that would take effect immediately for them if they tried, so they obey God only out of fear of suffering this punishment? Your argument that since none of this is explicitly addressed in scripture that's proof it can't be correct is a weak argument. Many, many things we know to be true aren't explicitly addressed in scripture, yet they are true. However, according to your logic, they can't be. But...they are. The Bible, by the way, makes no claim that it explains EVERYTHING there is to know about EVERYTHING. That wasn't it's purpose. Yes, I realize my beliefs are not directly addressed in scripture. They are just a theory. But, that doesn't mean they can't be possible.
     
    Last edited: Jun 22, 2017
  5. BrianW

    BrianW Active Member

    This has been debated ( for good reason) for a long, long time and both of you guys arguments could be correct. But I happen agree with Aaron on this one for the simple fact that the phrase "The sons of God" always refers to angels in the old testament.
    We know that fallen angels were imprisoned ( Jude 6 ) and this could very well be the reason why and why no other fallen ones do this now. And of course God being able to do anything could very well have just made it impossible after the fact.
    We also know that angels could/can take on physical form so it is very possible that could even be able to do so to the point that they could procreate. We have nothing to say that they can't and very good reasons to believe that they could because the phrase "Sons of God" always referred to angels in the OT. See how that all comes around?
    And this could very well be the reason for the flood and the reason people were evil and all except Noah and his family rejected God.

    I'm willing to admit that this is conjecture but so is the other side.
     
  6. TrustGzus

    TrustGzus What does this button do? Staff Member

    Norman Geisler says there are four views about the sons of God in Genesis and he said he held all four which means he's been wrong 75% of the time no matter what's correct.
     
  7. BrianW

    BrianW Active Member

    4? I'll have to look that up. Thanks for the heads up!
     
  8. TrustGzus

    TrustGzus What does this button do? Staff Member

    I only know of three off the top of my head.
     
  9. The Parson

    The Parson Your friendly neighborhood parson Staff Member

    I have a saying, when in doubt, look up Spurgeon, Edwards, grandpa or great grandpa Davis. One or the other have said something about whatever in the scriptures at one time or the other...
     
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  10. BrianW

    BrianW Active Member

    They are saying 4 because they separate angels from wicked fallen angels. Nah. It's angels, Cain's descendants or Seth's descendants. That makes 3.
     
  11. Athanasius

    Athanasius Life is not a problem to be solved Staff Member

    God via the Holy Spirit is perfectly able to impregnate Mary because He created humanity. Notice, however, that the Holy Spirit did not take on corporeal form to have sex with Mary, as you're suggesting the angels did in Genesis 6. In terms of offspring: why do you suppose that giants have to be angel-human hybrids? Why not normal people who are just really strong, or short people no taller than Hobbits? Goliath was a giant who was killed by a rock to his forehead -- were angels continuing to fall just to sleep with Philistine women? Merely suggesting that Devil May Cry is historical isn't reason enough to believe that it is. On that point, if Jesus is correct and angels do not marry, then from where did their sexual appetites form, given they had none? How did previously asexual beings develop sexuality without further creative acts of God?

    The angels are never described in Genesis 6 as fallen angels.

    Procreation requires a complete human male, and a complete human female. I hate to be the guy who says, 'science tell us...', but science tells us. Unless you think the physical world is putty in the hands of any spiritual being out there (i.e., a form of Gnosticism), this just doesn't work. Either the angels become fully human and have normal children, or they stay angels. Where in Scripture do we read about angels becoming human? Nowhere. You're already giving up ground by affirming that they would need to become human to copulate with human women.

    Let's look at the context, then: where are angels eating food? On that point, why assume that interacting with the physical world is only possible with physical bodies? To the latter point: Goliath was a giant, too, so what angel made a body for themselves after the flood (that you say couldn't, and was under the wrath of God)?

    No, my argument is that it's not in Scripture, explicitly, or implicitly, and that there are significant difficulties, both Scripturally and scientifically, with the view. You haven't replied to anything I've said. All you've been doing is re-asserting yourself.

    Hence Russell's mocking teapot. If your beliefs are not addressed in Scripture, then they are unscriptural.
     
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  12. Athanasius

    Athanasius Life is not a problem to be solved Staff Member

    On the face of it that's a logical fallacy, but let's examine it.

    Is this attested to in Scripture other than the vague reference in Jude 6?

    No: we know that they appeared human, and interacted with the physical world. We also know that they were capable of acts that we aren't, e.g., blinding the men of Nineveh. We do not know that in taking on physical form they took on human form.

    Another point I keep bringing up by no one wants to address: if an angel becomes human, it cannot become an angel again, for humans cannot change their species (as angels apparently can do). Any ideas on this one?

    Genesis 6 tells us why the Flood happened: mankind was evil. Mankind was not evil because of angel-human hybrids, Alex.

    Conjecture isn't enough. It must be supported in Scripture, or abandoned.
     
  13. RabbiKnife

    RabbiKnife Open the pod bay door, please HAL. Staff Member

    I've never understood how anyone could find a mixed species fallen angel/human hybrid in Scripture.

    The concrete transformer's in the horrible Russell Crow "Noah" movie were utterly ridiculous.
     
  14. TrustGzus

    TrustGzus What does this button do? Staff Member

    I'm on the "not angels" side of the question.
     
  15. BrianW

    BrianW Active Member

    LOL.


    I already told you, conjecture,


    Physical human characteristics doesn't have to mean completely human. That's your hangup about this not mine.


    On the face of it that's a logical fallacy, but let's examine it.
    Nothing anywhere says they would have to give up their angelic characteristics and become fully human.

    But the question remains, why did all but Noah turn evil. What could happen to bring about God killing all men, women children, animals etc etc except Noah. Yeah, we know mankind was evil. What we aren't told is how things got to the point that God said He was sorry He created us. Your show has been canceled. [/QUOTE]


    Sometimes conjecture and faith is all we have and we still formed doctrines that the church teaches today. I'm not saying this should be one of them because I don't actually see this as a big deal one way or another. But still, that's a bold saying on this when other examples of important things could be pointed out. Want me to hit you with a big one?
     
  16. Athanasius

    Athanasius Life is not a problem to be solved Staff Member

    For real, because there are plenty of references in the Old Testament where, e.g., the children of God are clearly human, not angelic. Consider also the connection between 'sons of God' and Jesus qua the 'Son of God', who is also the 'Son of Man'. In Galatians 3 Paul refers to Christians as children of God through Christ, so to suggest that because, e.g. Job uses the phrase 'heavenly beings' (i.e. 'sons of God'), that Moses obviously meant the same in Genesis 6, isn't the tightest reasoning. But even this popular suggestion has issues. For example, in Job 1 the 'sons of God' are not referred to as fallen angels, and while that's true of Genesis 6, it would be odd not to mention it, if indeed some kind of angelic fall occurred. So, we're not, in fact, looking at a one-to-one comparison, if the sons of God in Genesis 6 are rebellious, but the songs of God in Job 1 aren't. Do you suppose that it's accurate to continue to call rebellious angels 'sons' of God, if it's not appropriate to refer to those who reject Jesus as children of God? I don't.

    Based on what?

    It does if we're suggesting procreation. That either requires (1) completely human anatomy, or (2) compatibility between angelic anatomy and human anatomy. We know that (2) is impossible because angels are a different species than humanity, and per Jesus, don't marry. Angels are, as far has been revealed to us, asexual, agender, spiritual beings. To suggest that they procreated with human women requires that they have fantastic control over the physical creation, or God created angels with this capacity for no reason, or God gifted the angels this capacity at some point after their creation. You can argue another alternative from silence, but it's not my hangup -- it's yours, because you have to account for how 'it' works when humans and angels cross breed.

    In the same vein, we have to be careful what we sneak into the text. Aaron was talking about giants, earlier, but that's not a feature of Genesis 6.

    Reality says exactly this. Do you really think angels became sorta-kinda human, genetically engineered the physicality they took on to be compatible with human women, and then went on their merry way? Human existence isn't something a being, spiritual or not, assumes and discards at will. And again, no one has accounted for why an alien species would find human women attractive. Why would they? This kind of thinking is Origen's view of the fall, applied to angels. It's a view you'd reject immediately if it were applied as Origen applied it, so why allow it here so easily? You appealed earlier to Colossians 2.8, so where's that concern for worldly philosophy now? I've brought up quite a number of points to Aaron, and now here as well, but I'm not getting much by way of reply. Why is that, do you think?

    It clearly says why in Genesis 6:

    5 The Lord saw that the wickedness of humankind was great in the earth, and that every inclination of the thoughts of their hearts was only evil continually.
    6 And the Lord was sorry that he had made humankind on the earth, and it grieved him to his heart.

    Why? Because previously people had begun calling on the name of the Lord. Genesis 4:

    26 To Seth also a son was born, and he named him Enosh. At that time people began to invoke the name of the Lord.

    You tell me what's more likely: Noah was righteous (i.e., righteous relative to the world around him) because he had an awareness of God and heeded that inbuilt consciousness, or because Noah's family line wasn't corrupted by angelic expats? The former.

    What well formed doctrines are built on 'conjecture and faith' (in the sense you're using it to refer to the fallen angel view of Genesis 6)?

    Go for it, but if you do, reply to what I'm saying above.
     
  17. BrianW

    BrianW Active Member

    Oh man. I clearly stated the phrase "Sons of God" and Old Testament. Now you want to throw New Testament references in to what? Prove me wrong? On something I said was conjecture in the first place?


    The same thing conjecture is always based on: Incomplete information. You know this already bro.

    Now you're using conjecture. The difference is you're trying to present it as if all you wrote was 100% clearly proven.

    I agree that we have to be careful of "sneaking" things into the text. But you do remember that context is king right? I think my logic was reasonable. You're free to think I'm loony.


    Comparing what I said to Origen's view of the fall? Don't be silly man. You haven't got anymore of a clue as to if what you just wrote regarding angels is factual or not. Yes, angels are spiritual beings...that can transform into physical beings. How would you know what the limits are? Scripture is all we have to go by and the parameters aren't given in the slightest.




    That does not say WHY all of mankind except Noah was wicked. It say's they were -not how things got so atrocious that God killed everyone and the animals etc except Noah. I mean, that's a huge thing to do. The ark, which animals and such would be on it and the annihilation of the rest. We aren't told WHY they ALL became so wicked.

    As an aside I'm OK with not being told why. God did it so I know it was right for Him to do so. I don't have to know why.


    LOL. You want to put conditions on how I can answer? As long as you understand that I'm not constrained by them, fine.

    Eternal Conscious Torment. I happen to think it's the right doctrine by the way. Still, it's not iron clad and conjecture does come into play. Based upon your "Conjecture isn't enough. It must be supported in Scripture, or abandoned." this would have to be abandoned . Even if it's only 5 - 15 % conjecture. 100% clearly supported or abandoned right?
     
    Last edited: Jun 23, 2017
  18. ProDeo

    ProDeo What a day for a day dream

    If there would not have been the (in detail) references in the Enoch books endorsed by several early church fathers then yeah.

    If Jude hadn't quoted from Enoch then yeah.

    If sons of God in the OT (and even the NT) didn't strictly refer to creatures not created by the human will then yeah.

    If Paul hadn't written -- a wife ought to have a symbol of authority on her head, because of the angels -- then ...

    In the end I am undecided.

    Again.

    Ridiculous indeed.
     
  19. Athanasius

    Athanasius Life is not a problem to be solved Staff Member

    To discuss the view, clearly. I am not interesting in proving you wrong, or myself right. I am interested in whether we are justified in conjecturing that 'sons of God' in Genesis 6 refers to angels. In other words, I am interested in doing theology.

    As to why I mentioned the New Testament: why shouldn't I? Your premise is that throughout the Old Testament, 'sons of God' always refers to angelic beings. You're arguing from the unity of Scripture, and if that's the case, then why would we ignore the New Testament . (e.g., Luke 20)? Are you suggesting a shift in the language - does 'sons of God' mean one thing in the Old Testament, but another in the New Testament? If so, then why? The authors of the New Testament were writing out of a knowledge of the Old Testament, so on what grounds do we say, 'yes to this, no to that'? If it's an Old Testament / New Testament distinction, then why not a distinction between the different genres of the Old Testament? Why not a distinction between genres, further broken down between authors? Why not divide each book according to time period -- language evolves over time, does it not (which is the implication of excluding the New Testament), but who is to say that isn't the case within the Old Testament itself? Did Moses mean the same thing as the author of Job?

    Based on what (information)? It's obviously incomplete because it's conjecture, but what is it that provides a foundation for the conjecture?

    It is at this point that you would provide a counter argument. I am indeed writing as if my view is the correct one, so show me that it is not:

    - Why would angels find human women attractive? We are different species. When Vulcans first encountered humans they complained about the smell. Why wouldn't angels? Humans are messy, more so in the ancient world.
    - If angels do not marry (per Jesus), which means they do not procreate, then where did they develop sexuality (e.g., arousal, a sexual appetite, and so forth)?
    - We know that procreation is a complex, involved, complicated process. By what means did angels become trans-species human? Partly human? Pseudo-human? Why, in becoming trans, did they retain the ability to turn back (in reference to other angelic appearances in the Old Testament)?
    - Where in Scripture do we read about angels manipulating the physical universe to their will?
    - If these are angels in Genesis 6, why are they referred to as the 'sons of God', when clearly they aren't (just as we aren't children of God until we are through faith in Jesus)?
    - Why isn't the reference back to Genesis 4.26 a compelling point?
    - To Aaron's point: the Nephilim were said to occupy the promised land, so were angels still breeding with humans during the Exodus, and thereafter? If not, then why do we take the descriptions of giants in the Old Testament as an authoritative description of the Nephilim in Genesis?

    You've mentioned your logic, but you haven't stated it (yet).

    The notion is that angels lusted after the daughters of men, just as in the Origenal fall we grew bored and lusted for things outside of God's will for us. It's heresy sneaking in a few chapters later than it had hoped (which is not to say that anyone who thinks the 'sons of God' in Genesis 6 are heretics, just not well read on the view). We don't need to know much about angels to examine the view. What does Scripture say? No where are angels shown to be able to become actually human (humans don't, for example, have the ability to blind a town). What do we know of the physical creation? That it was specially created by God, with humans as in His image - what does this say about humanity as 'in His image', re: the supposed ability of angels to take on this image at will? What do we know of human procreation? Why are rebellious angels referred to as 'sons of God' if this is a title reserved for the faithful? I am arguing that angels are spiritual beings, and never presented in Scripture as anything but, aren't Q, and are essentially ontologically constrained as we are. You're and others are arguing that Scripture doesn't say it, so anything is possible. I'm asking you to take that 'anything is possible' and compare it to what we do know, to then see if it's still reasonable to conjecture the 'anything'. I say that it isn't. I'm not Gnostic: the spiritual is not superior to the physical, such that one descends from spirit into flesh for corruption. You're not Gnostic either, but this is conjecture you're entertaining.

    Again, it says in verse 5: 'every inclination of the thoughts of their hearts was only evil continually.' Do you suppose that this situation can only arise from angelic cross-species breeding with humans? The human race does terrible things every day, so has that breeding continued, or is there another reason (i.e., sin, separation from God, etc.)?

    Yes, because so far I am providing an argument for my view, and no one is refuting it in the slightest. If you expect me to interact with your 'big one', I expect you to interact with what I've been saying. Otherwise, all you're doing is reasserting yourself, and that thing called 'theology' that a lot of people like to talk about remains undone.

    Conjecture as far as this view of Genesis 6 goes is predicated on a couple verses in Genesis, Job, Jude, etc., supported by external references to 1 Enoch, Jubilees, Philo, Josephus, etc. You'd dream for 5 - 15% conjecture on this one - more like 98%. ECT has been the historical consensus for millennia, and has been discussed and debated at length for just as long. This view of Genesis 6, for as long as it's been around, qualifies as historical fiction by comparison.
     
  20. RabbiKnife

    RabbiKnife Open the pod bay door, please HAL. Staff Member

    Vulcans don't think humans smell.

    They think they smell weird.

    :)
     

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